I think wamu is a really gay word, just like washington mutual

Check out the latest from hit programs like The Kojo Nnamdi Show, 1A and many more. Wamu should be use for Washington Mutual, since more people would type 'wamu' for the bank instead of this small radio station. Also, I think 'wamu' is copyrighted by Washington Mutual. There is an article at Washington Mutual. The disambiguation link at the top of this article suffices. Facebook is showing information to help you better understand the purpose of a Page. Macintosh ® operating system: Mac OS Yosemite (version 10.10 and higher) Personalize your experience. Would you like a different type size, background or text color?

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when you've done something so cringe you can't stop replaying it in your head and it stops you from getting on with your every day life
Dan: bro why have you been staring into space for the last hour doing nothing?
Me: bro i have a chronic cringe from what happened earlier I can't concentrate
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noun.
1. The byproduct of eating out a mans asshole formed from a mixture of saliva, fecal matter and sometimes anal lubricants.
exclamation
2. Express disgust, annoyance, contempt, impatience, or simply for emphasis.
verb
3. To express waste, pain, failure or painful failure.
noun:
'That was some great ass, by my mouth is full of wamu'
exclamation:
'That shit is fucking wamu'
verb:
ex. 1 'if you don't stop, I will wamu you like a little bitch'
ex. 2 'your ass got wamued'
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Wamu Home Page

I went over and robbed the wamu on the corner.
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I hope citidon't go wamu on me.
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n. 1/3 of the 836 Mafia
v. a way of getting Whitney's attention in a loud, crowded orgy.
Schedule
WAMU, come and save my born again virgin ass from this orgy. Thanks.
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Gay people who eat out other men and hate on the oozk who are bosses
by Kyle Price May 14, 2008
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Mac

Wamu 88

WAMU 88.5 FM is the leading public radio station for NPR news and information in the greater Washington, DC area. It is member-supported, professionally-staffed, and licensed to American University. Since 1961, WAMU has provided programming to a growing audience that now totals more than 575,900 listeners in the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia.
Beginning in 1948, students at American University used homemade transmitting facilities to operate a campus radio station, WAMC. In 1950, the station was robbed of every possession, but by the following year, the station was back on the air as WAMU-AM, a 25 watt campus station. In 1953, American University and the Evening Star Newspaper joined to build a television building on campus, and WAMU secured new studios within the building. In 1961, WAMU moved from AM to FM and signed on from the campus of American University at 4 pm on October 23rd, using a 4,000-watt transmitter purchased from WGBH Boston. As the sixth member of the Educational Radio Network -- the predecessor to National Public Radio -- WAMU's founding vision was to 'provide attractive, challenging programming that involves our listeners as completely as possible in the learning experience...'
In 1963, WAMU hired its first paid employees -- among them, Susan Stamberg and George Geesey. Armed with equipment secured through donations and scavenges of military surplus stores, WAMU covered some of the biggest events of the 1960s, including John F. Kennedy's assassination, the 1963 March on Washington led by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., and the 1964 Presidential election.
In 1978 the station moved off the American University campus, and was removed from American University subsidy due to financial constraints and a need for campus space. WAMU formed a new, non profit organization to run the station: Public Radio Services, Inc. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, WAMU made efforts to create a more consistent line up of programming, eliminating classical, rock, and big band programming, and focusing on bluegrass, jazz and news/talk.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, WAMU fundraisers brought increasing funds into the station, and in 1994, WAMU moved in to new, state-of-the-art facilities. In 1997, the station launched its website, wamu.org, and within two years, began streaming all of its programming online.
In the 21st century, WAMU continues its commitment to provide a unique mixture of news, public affairs talk programming, and traditional American music both to the D.C. Metropolitan area, and to the world via the station's website.